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See also: ABU ABDULLAH MAHOMMED, surnamed See also: IBN BATUTA (1304-1378), the greatest of Moslem travellers, was See also: born at See also: Tangier in 1304
.
He entered on his travels at twenty-one (1325) and closed them in 1355
.
He began by traversing the See also: coast of the Mediterranean from Tangier to Alexandria, finding See also: time to marry two wives on the road
.
After some stay at Cairo, then probably the greatest city in the See also: world (excluding See also: China), and an unsuccessful attempt to reach See also: Mecca from Aidhab on the west coast of the Red See also: Sea, he visited See also: Palestine, See also: Aleppo and See also: Damascus
.
He then made the pilgrimage to Mecca and See also: Medina, and visited the shrine of See also: Ali at Mashhad-Ali, travelling thence to Basra, and across the mountains of Khuzistan to See also: Isfahan, thence to See also: Shiraz and back to See also: Kufa and See also: Bagdad
.
After an excursion to See also: Mosul and Diarbekr, he made the haj a second time, staying at Mecca three years
.
He next sailed down the Red Sea to See also: Aden (then a place of See also: great See also: trade), the singular position of which he describes, noticing its dependence for See also: water-supply upon the great cisterns restored in See also: modern times
.
He continued his voyage down the See also: African coast, visiting, among other places, See also: Mombasa and Quiloa (See also: Kilwa)
.
Returning See also: north he passed by the chief cities of See also: Oman to New Ormuz (Hurmuz), which had about 15 years before, c
.
1315, been transferred to its famous See also: island-site from the mainland (Old Ormuz)
.
After visiting other parts of the gulf he crossed the breadth of See also: Arabia to Mecca, making the haj for the third time
.
See also: Crossing the Red Sea, he made a journey of great hardship to Syene, and thence along the See also: Nile to Cairo
.
After this, travelling through See also: Syria, he made a circuit among the See also: petty See also: Turkish states into which See also: Asia Minor was divided after the fall of the See also: kingdom of See also: Rum (See also: Iconium)
.
He now crossed the Black Sea to See also: Kaffa, then mainly occupied by the Genoese, and apparently the first Christian city he had seen, for he was much perturbed by the See also: bell-ringing
.
He next travelled into Kipchak (the Mongol khanate of See also: Russia), and joined the See also: camp of the reigning khan Mahon-lined Uzbeg, from whom the great and heterogeneous Uzbeg See also: race is perhaps named
.
Among other places in this See also: empire he travelled to Bolghar (540 54' N.) in See also: order to witness the shortness of the summer See also: night, and desired to continue his travels north into the " See also: band of Darkness " (in the extreme north of Russia), of which wondetful things were told, but was obliged to forego this
.
Returning to the khan's camp he joined the cortege of one of the Khatuns, who was a See also: Greek princess by See also: birth (probably illegitimate) and in her train travelled to Constantinople, where he had an interview with the emperor Andronikos III. the Younger (1328-1341)
.
He tells how, as he passed the city See also: gates, he heard the See also: guards muttering Sarakinu
.
Returning to the See also: court of Uzbeg, at Sarai on the Volga, he crossed the See also: steppes to Khwarizm and See also: Bokhara; thence through Khorasan and See also: Kabul, See also: awl over the See also: Hindu Kush (to which he gives that name, its first occurrence)
.
He reached
the See also: Indus, on his own statement, in See also: September, 1333
.
This closes the first See also: part of his narrative
.
From See also: Sind, which he traversed to the sea and back again, he proceeded to See also: Multan, and eventually, on the invitation of Mahommed Tughlak, the reigning See also: sovereign,to See also: Delhi
.
Mahommed was a singular character, full of pretence at least to many accomplishments and virtues, the founder of public charities, and a profuse See also: patron of scholars, but a parricide, a fratricide, and as madly capricious, bloodthirsty and unjust as Caligula
.
" No See also: day did his palace See also: gate fail to witness the See also: elevation of some abject to affluence and the torture and See also: murder of some living soul." He appointed the traveller to be kazi of Delhi, with a See also: present of 12,000 See also: silver dinars (rupees), and an See also: annual See also: salary of the same amount, besides an See also: assignment of See also: village lands
.
In the sultan's service Ibn Batuta remained eight years; but his See also: good See also: fortune stimulated his natural extravagance, and his debts soon amounted to four or five times his salary
.
At last he See also: fell into disfavour and retired from court, only to be summoned again on a congenial duty
.
The emperor of China, last of the Mongol dynasty, had sent a See also: mission to Delhi, and the See also: Moor was to accompany the return See also: embassy (1342)
.
The party travelled through central See also: India to See also: Cambay and thence sailed to See also: Calicut, classed by the traveller with the neighbouring Kaulam (See also: Quilon), Alexandria, Sudak in the See also: Crimea, and Zayton (See also: Amoy harbour) in China, as one of the greatest trading havens in the world—an interesting enumeration from one who had seen them all
.
The mission party was to embark in See also: Chinese junks (the word used) and smaller vessels, but that carrying the other envoys and the presents, which started before Ibn Batuta was ready, was wrecked totally; the vessel that he had engaged went off with his See also: property, and he was See also: left on the See also: beach of Ca/licut
.
Not daring to return to Delhi, he remained about Hon and other cities of the western coast, taking part in various adventures, among others the capture of Sindabur (See also: Goa), and visiting the Maldive Islands, where he became kazi, and married four wives, and of which he has left the best See also: medieval account, hardly surpassed by any modern
.
In See also: August 1344 he left the Maldives for See also: Ceylon; here he made the pilgrimage to the " Footmark of our See also: Father See also: Adam." Thence he betook himself to Maabar (the Coromandel coast), where he joined a Mussulman adventurer, residing at See also: Madura, who had made himself master of much of that region
.
After once more visiting See also: Malabar, Canara and the Maldives, he departed for See also: Bengal, a voyage of See also: forty-three days, landing at Sadkawan (See also: Chittagong)
.
In Bengal he visited the famous Moslem See also: saint Shaykh Jalaluddin, whose shrine (Shah Jalal at Silhet) is still maintained
.
Returning to the See also: delta, he took See also: ship at Sunarganw (near See also: Dacca) on a See also: junk bound for See also: Java (i.e
.
Java Minor of Marco Polo, or See also: Sumatra)
.
Touching the coast of See also: Arakan or See also: Burma, he reached Sumatra in forty days, and was provided with a junk for China by Malik al Dhahir, a zealous See also: disciple of See also: Islam, which had recently spread among the states on the See also: northern coast of that island
.
Calling (apparently) at See also: Cambodia on his way, Ibn Batuta reached China at Zayton (Amoy harbour), famous from Marco Polo; he also visited Sin Kalan or See also: Canton, and professes to have been in Khansa (Kinsey of Marco Polo, i.e
.
Hangchau), and Khanbalik (See also: Cambaluc or See also: Peking)
.
The truth of his visit to these two cities, and especially to the last, has been questioned
.
The traveller's See also: history, not least in China, singularly illustrates the See also: free See also: masonry of Islam, and its power of carrying a Moslem See also: doctor over the known world of Asia and See also: Africa
.
On his way home he saw the great See also: bird Rukh (evidently, from his description, an island lifted by refraction); revisited Sumatra, Malabar, Oman, See also: Persia, Bagdad, and crossed the great See also: desert to See also: Palmyra and Damascus, where he got his first See also: news of home, and heard of his father's See also: death fifteen years before
.
Diverging to Hamath and Aleppo, on his return to Damascus, he found the Black Death
raging, so that two thousand four See also: hundred died in one day
.
Revisiting Jerusalem and Cairo he made the- haj a See also: fourth time,
and finally reappeared at See also: Fez (visiting See also: Sardinia en route) on
the 8th of See also: November 1349, after twenty-four years' See also: absence
.
See also: Morocco, he felt, was, after all, the best of countries
.
"The
did:erns of the West are but little; but then you get more forthem." After going home to Tangier, Ibn Batuta crossed into See also: Spain and made the round of See also: Andalusia, including See also: Gibraltar, which had just then stood a siege from the " See also: Roman See also: tyrant Adfunus " (See also: Alphonso XI. of See also: Castile, 1312-1350)
.
In 1352 the restless See also: man started for Central Africa, passing by the oases of the See also: Sahara (where the houses were built of See also: rock-See also: salt, as See also: Herodotus tells, and roofed with camel skins) to Timbuktu and See also: Gogo on the See also: Niger, a See also: river which he calls the Nile, believing it to flow down into See also: Egypt, an opinion maintained by some up to the date of See also: Lander's See also: discovery
.
Being then recalled by his own See also: king, he returned to Fez (early in 13;4) via Takadda, Haggar and
See also: Tuat
.
Thus ended his twenty-eight years ' wanderings which in their See also: main lines alone exceeded 75,000 M
.
By royal order he dictated his narrative to 1\,Iahommed Ibn Juzai, who concludes the See also: work, 13th of See also: December 1355 (A.D.) with the declaration: " This Shaykh is the traveller of our age; and he who should See also: call him the traveller of the whole See also: body of Islam would not exceed the truth." Ibn Batuta died in 1378, aged seventy-three
.
Ibn Batuta's travels have only been known in See also: Europe during the 19th century; at first merely by Arabic abridgments in the See also: Gotha and Cambridge See also: libraries
.
Notices or extracts had been published by See also: Seetzen (c
.
1808), Kosegarten (1818), Apetz (1819), and Burckhardt (1819), when in 1829 Dr S
.
See also: Lee published for the
See also: Oriental See also: Translation Fund a version from the abridged See also: MSS. at Cambridge, which attracted much See also: interest
.
The French capture of Constantina afforded MSS. of the See also: complete work, one of them the autograph of Ibn Juzai
.
And from these, after versions of fragments by various French scholars, was derived at last (1858–1859) the See also: standard edition and translation of the whole by M
.
Defremery and Dr Sanguinetti, in 4 vols
.
See also See also: Sir See also: Henry
See also: Yule, See also: Cathay, ii
.
397-526 ; C
.
See also: Raymond Beazley, Dawn of Modern Geography, iii
.
535-538 . Though there are some singular See also: chronological difficulties in the narrative, and a good many cursory inaccuracies and exaggerations, there is no part of it except, perhaps, certain portions of the journeys in north China, which is open to doubt
.
The accounts of the Maldive Islands, and of the See also: Negro countries on the Niger, are replete with interesting and accurate particulars
.
The former agrees surprisingly with that given by the only other See also: foreign See also: resident we know of, Pyrard de la Val, two hundred and fifty years later
.
Ibn Batuta's statements and anecdotes regarding the showy virtues and solid vices of Sultan Muhammad Tughlak are in entire agreement with See also: Indian historians, and add many fresh details
.
(H
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Y.; C
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